E. Palazzotto
University of Palermo
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Featured researches published by E. Palazzotto.
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2015
E. Palazzotto; Giovanni Renzone; Pietro Fontana; Luigi Botta; Andrea Scaloni; Anna Maria Puglia; Giuseppe Gallo
The molecular mechanisms regulating tryptophan biosynthesis in actinomycetes are poorly understood; similarly, the possible roles of tryptophan in the differentiation program of microorganism life-cycle are still underexplored. To unveil the possible regulatory effect of this amino acid on gene expression, an integrated study based on quantitative teverse transcription-PCR (qRT-PCR) and proteomic approaches was performed on the actinomycete model Streptomyces coelicolor. Comparative analyses on the microorganism growth in a minimal medium with or without tryptophan supplementation showed that biosynthetic trp gene expression in S. coelicolor is not subjected to a negative regulation by the presence of the end product. Conversely, tryptophan specifically induces the transcription of trp genes present in the biosynthetic gene cluster of the calcium-dependent antibiotic (CDA), a lipopeptide containing d- and l-tryptophan residues. In addition, tryptophan stimulates the transcription of the CDA gene cluster regulator cdaR and, coherently, CDA production. Surprisingly, tryptophan also promotes the production of actinorhodin, another antibiotic that does not contain this amino acid in its structure. Combined 2D-DIGE and nano liquid chromatography electrospray linear ion trap tandem mass spectrometry (LC-ESI-LIT-MS/MS) analyses revealed that tryptophan exerts a growth-stage-dependent global effect on S. coelicolor proteome, stimulating anabolic pathways and promoting the accumulation of key factors associated with morphological and physiological differentiation at the late growth stages. Phenotypic observations by scanning electron microscopy and spore production assays demonstrated an increased sporulation in the presence of tryptophan. Transcriptional analysis of catabolic genes kynA and kynB suggested that the actinomycete also uses tryptophan as a carbon and nitrogen source. In conclusion, this study originally provides the molecular basis underlying the stimulatory effect of tryptophan on the production of antibiotics and morphological development program of this actinomycete.
PLOS ONE | 2016
E. Palazzotto; Giuseppe Gallo; Giovanni Renzone; Anna Giardina; Alberto Sutera; Joohee Silva; Celinè Vocat; Luigi Botta; Andrea Scaloni; Anna Maria Puglia
In the model actinomycete Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2), small open reading frames encoding proteins with unknown functions were identified in several amino acid biosynthetic gene operons, such as SCO2038 (trpX) in the tryptophan trpCXBA locus. In this study, the role of the corresponding protein in tryptophan biosynthesis was investigated by combining phenotypic and molecular analyses. The 2038KO mutant strain was characterized by delayed growth, smaller aerial hyphae and reduced production of spores and actinorhodin antibiotic, with respect to the WT strain. The capability of this mutant to grow on minimal medium was rescued by tryptophan and tryptophan precursor (serine and/or indole) supplementation on minimal medium and by gene complementation, revealing the essential role of this protein, here named TrpM, as modulator of tryptophan biosynthesis. His-tag pull-down and bacterial adenylate cyclase-based two hybrid assays revealed TrpM interaction with a putative leucyl-aminopeptidase (PepA), highly conserved component among various Streptomyces spp. In silico analyses showed that PepA is involved in the metabolism of serine, glycine and cysteine through a network including GlyA, CysK and CysM enzymes. Proteomic experiments suggested a TrpM-dependent regulation of metabolic pathways and cellular processes that includes enzymes such as GlyA, which is required for the biosynthesis of tryptophan precursors and key proteins participating in the morpho-physiological differentiation program. Altogether, these findings reveal that TrpM controls tryptophan biosynthesis at the level of direct precursor availability and, therefore, it is able to exert a crucial effect on the morpho-physiological differentiation program in S. coelicolor A3(2).
BMC Genomics | 2016
Giuseppe Gallo; Giovanni Renzone; E. Palazzotto; Paolo Monciardini; Simona Arena; T. Faddetta; Anna Giardina; Rosa Alduina; Tilmann Weber; Fabio Sangiorgi; A. Russo; Giovanni Spinelli; Margherita Sosio; Andrea Scaloni; Anna Maria Puglia
Microbiology 2017 - XXXII SIMGBM Congress | 2017
A. Vassallo; E. Palazzotto; A. Lanza; Luigi Botta; Giovanni Renzone; Roberto Scaffaro; Andrea Scaloni; Giuseppe Gallo; Anna Maria Puglia
7th Congress of European Microbiologists (FEMS) | 2017
A. Vassallo; E. Palazzotto; M. Pravatà; Luigi Botta; Giuseppe Gallo; Anna Maria Puglia
XIV FISV CONGRESS | 2016
E. Palazzotto; Giuseppe Gallo; A. Vassallo; Alberto Sutera; Giovanni Renzone; Anna Giardina; J. Silva; C. Vocat; Andrea Scaloni; Anna Maria Puglia
XIV Congresso FISV | 2016
T. Faddetta; E. Palazzotto; Francesco Strati; C. Catania; F. Ardizzone; B. Zuber; Giuseppe Gallo; C. De Filippo; Vincenzo Cavalieri; Anna Maria Puglia
Biotecnologie - Ricerca di base, interdisciplinare e traslazionale in ambito biomedico | 2016
T. Faddetta; E. Palazzotto; Faillaci F; C. Catania; Francesco Strati; C. De Filippo; Giovanni Spinelli; Anna Maria Puglia; Giuseppe Gallo; Vincenzo Cavalieri
Ricerca di base, interdisciplinare e traslazionale in ambito Biologico e Biotecnologico | 2015
T. Faddetta; Giuseppe Gallo; Giovanni Renzone; E. Palazzotto; Paolo Monciardini; Simona Arena; Anna Giardina; Rosa Alduina; Tilmann Weber; Fabio Sangiorgi; A. Russo; Giovanni Spinelli; Margherita Sosio; Andrea Scaloni; Anna Maria Puglia
Ricerca di base, Interdisciplinare e Traslazionale in ambito biologico e biotecnologico | 2015
E. Palazzotto; A. Vassallo; Giuseppe Gallo; T. Faddetta; L. Cutugno; V. Pravatà; Luigi Botta; Anna Maria Puglia